Yilmaz, Inc. v. Director, Division of Taxation

22 N.J. Tax 204
CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedApril 1, 2005
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 22 N.J. Tax 204 (Yilmaz, Inc. v. Director, Division of Taxation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yilmaz, Inc. v. Director, Division of Taxation, 22 N.J. Tax 204 (N.J. Super. Ct. 2005).

Opinion

MENYUK, J.T.C.

Plaintiff Yilmaz, Inc. contests a final determination of the defendant Director, Division of Taxation (the “Director”), which found [211]*211that plaintiff owed deficiencies of sales tax, N.J.S.A 54:32B-1 to - 29, corporation business tax, N.J.S.A 54:10A-1 to -41, and gross income tax (withholding), N.J.S.A. 54A:7-1 to -7. The principal issue is the validity of the “markup” analysis performed by the Director’s auditor in reconstructing plaintiffs income and receipts. The challenged assessments for the indicated audit periods, as stipulated to by the parties, are as follows:

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Of the foregoing amounts, plaintiff had conceded that it owed sales tax that it had failed to collect from its customers with respect to certain cover charges, and has paid $3840. Plaintiff has additionally made a payment of $27,647 in sales tax, pursuant to the provisions of L. 2002, c. 6, the tax amnesty law, codified at N.J.S.A. 54:53-18.

During the tax years in issue and thereafter, plaintiff operated a restaurant and bar known as the Bridgewater Pub in Bridgeton, New Jersey. The principal issue in this case is the application of the so-called “mark on” or “markup” methodology employed by the Director to compute the gross receipts of the plaintiff. The markup method primarily affects the sales tax assessment, but the estimate of gross receipts arrived at by use of the markup method in this case has resulted in increases in the corporation business tax and gross income tax withholding assessments that are also in [212]*212issue. Accordingly, plaintiffs arguments are directed toward the Division’s application of the markup method.

In general terms, the markup methodology is used when the Director’s auditor deems the records of a taxpayer, whose receipts are primarily in cash, insufficient to verify the gross receipts as reported on the taxpayer’s sales tax returns and income tax returns. The auditor compares the cost of the goods sold by the taxpayer, as developed from invoices and from the records of suppliers, to the prices at which those goods are sold, as indicated on the menu and from other records maintained by the taxpayer, and computes a ratio of selling price to cost, or “markup.” For example, if the taxpayer purchased twelve bottles of beer at a cost of one dollar each, and sold each bottle for a price of two dollars, the markup would be computed as total sales of that product, or $24, divided by cost, or $12, and the markup would equal 2.0. A detailed markup analysis for the goods sold by the taxpayer is performed for a test period, in this case the calendar year 1997, and the overall markup ratio for that test period is applied to the taxpayer’s audited purchases for each year of the audit period to develop audited gross receipts subject to sales tax for each year of the audit period.

In this case, the plaintiff contends that the Director utilized unreasonable and arbitrary assumptions in the markup analysis, particularly with respect to the low percentage of sales that the Division attributed to the taxpayer’s “happy hour,” during which free food and discounted drink prices were offered. The plaintiff also asserts that the Director failed to account for the inventories it maintained. The Director contends that the plaintiffs records were wholly deficient, and that the assumptions made by the auditor were reasonable in view of the lack of records or other evidence that would support the plaintiffs contentions. For the following reasons, I reject the plaintiffs contentions and affirm the Director’s assessments.

On or about March 1, 1999, the assigned auditor contacted Yavuz Yilmaz, the sole owner of the corporate plaintiff, and advised him that he would be conducting an audit of plaintiffs [213]*213business. Mr. Yilmaz referred the auditor to the plaintiffs accountant, and subsequently executed a power of attorney authorizing the accountant to represent the plaintiff during the audit.

By letter dated March 1, 1999, the auditor sent the accountant a pre-audit questionnaire inquiring as to certain operational information about the business, such as seating capacity, hours of operation, number of employees, names of suppliers, whether there was a happy hour, and if so, the hours, the availability of a free buffet, and what was served at any free buffet. The questionnaire also sought information regarding the accounting systems and methods used by the taxpayer, and asked for, among other things, the names of persons responsible for preparing tax returns, the types of financial and business records maintained by the taxpayer, the number of cash registers, how cash payouts were accounted for, the names of the taxpayer’s banks and its account numbers, and the frequency and method of bank deposits. The completed questionnaire was signed by Mr. Yilmaz on June 10, 1999. It stated that the business operated seven days a week, from 11 a.m. to 1 a.m., Monday through Saturday, and from noon until 10 p.m. on Sunday. The questionnaire also disclosed that plaintiff did not maintain a general ledger, a purchase journal, guest checks or cash register tapes. The questionnaire stated that a sales journal and records for cash payouts were maintained, and that records of cash payouts were in the form of invoices. In fact, as admitted by Mr. Yilmaz at trial, he only kept invoices for cash payouts for a brief period of time, and then he threw them out.

At the accountant’s request, the audit was deferred until after April 15, 1999, the due date for many tax returns. In a letter dated May 5, 1999, the accountant requested a further deferral of the audit because Yavuz Yilmaz’ brother had the plaintiffs records that were needed by the auditor, and the brother was currently out of the country and not expected back until May 17.

The actual work of the audit commenced in mid-June 1999, when the auditor visited the accountant’s office to review the plaintiff’s records. Subsequent to that visit, the auditor sent a fax [214]*214to the accountant listing those additional records that he wished to review. Among other things, the auditor asked the accountant for cash register tapes, missing bank account statements for 1997, an itemization of all inter-account transfers, the details of loans to and from the plaintiff, and copies of all paid bills for 1997. It is not clear whether a similar detailed request was made verbally at the time of the auditor’s initial visit since, at the time of trial, which was five years after the audit had begun and three years after the assessment resulting from the audit had been issued, the auditor had virtually no recollection of the specifics of this particular audit except as memorialized in his audit reports, worksheets and other documents generated by him at the time of the audit. The auditor testified that he conducted twenty or so audits a year.

It is undisputed that the taxpayer did not retain cash register tapes for any portion of the audit period. It was Mr. Yilmaz’ testimony that, during the audit period, he kept cash register tapes for two or three months and then destroyed them. The plaintiff also did not use guest checks.

The accountant testified that, at some point during the audit, he offered the auditor cash register tapes for 1999, but that the auditor had rejected them. These tapes were not offered as evidence at trial and there is no suggestion that they were offered during the administrative protest of the audit determination.

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Bluebook (online)
22 N.J. Tax 204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yilmaz-inc-v-director-division-of-taxation-njtaxct-2005.